Nine Minutes!

Aug 15, 2007 23:45


   Today I turned in the OPEC topic synopsis I'd been working on. At about five pages, its the longest synopsis I've ever written.

...
   It took them NINE MINUTES from the time I sent them the synopsis to fire me.

...   Nine minutes! Thats damn fast. But yeah, they called nine minutes later, the topic synopsis apparently wasn't long enough ( Read more... )

opec, amwest, mun, paxmun

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thepeoplesmp August 16 2007, 18:10:53 UTC
Do they want you to cover more topic areas or is the problem just the length?

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emosnail August 16 2007, 19:24:19 UTC
Just length. They made no evaluation of its quality, all they want is length ( ... )

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thepeoplesmp August 16 2007, 20:08:16 UTC
I think that would be a great thing to tell them. Id call/email them and say that if the only problem they have with the guide is its length and they want a paper that is longer and less likely to be read by delegates, that they're going to have to find a less qualified and more desperate chair to write it.

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emosnail August 16 2007, 20:30:28 UTC
Eh, I really feel like they'll just dismiss it as me being bitter -- and they've already had this policy in place for months and presumably extracted compliant synopsii from everyone else, and or turned over people in other committees until they got one

RELATED FACT: _I_ myself was actually shoed in late in the game to replace someone. I wouldn't be suprised if they too didn't want to write nine pages of crap for the conference! Which would clearly illustrate how they are losing their first choice staff and highly qualified second-choice staff until they end up with a third-choice ninny who'll write it.

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thepeoplesmp August 16 2007, 23:12:13 UTC
Bitterness aside, you certainly have a point. I suppose if you want to do it, you'll add four pages of fluff. Otherwise, I just tell them to piss off.

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Just Because Nat'ls Does It emosnail August 16 2007, 20:36:18 UTC
Its also worth noting, that while their excuse for wanting nine page reports is, like all the silliest things they do, because they want to be more like nationals. For nationals, however, staff are motivated to write their ridiculously long background guides (aren't they like fifty pages or something?) because they (A) get paid a stipend; and (B) bring themselves glory because its actually published, presented to the UN, and filed in the Library of Congress -- Amwest cannot even begin to compete with that kind of incentive to spend one's free time on a paper.

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Re: Just Because Nat'ls Does It thepeoplesmp August 16 2007, 23:10:27 UTC
Yeah, I do think its ridiculous that conferences are in this sort of academic-ness competition with each other. I'm told that for our school's (high school) conference this spring, our sg wants us to write 15 page background guides. What good does it do for anyone to have students read something that large and then tell them to go do research on top of it? ugh.

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Re: Just Because Nat'ls Does It emosnail August 16 2007, 23:16:32 UTC
15 pages! Ridiculous!!! Can I tell your SG to shove it? This is getting ridiculous. They are completely losing sight of the purpose of a background guide.

And there's no way in hell the high school students are going to read all 15 pages.

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Re: Just Because Nat'ls Does It thepeoplesmp August 16 2007, 23:52:58 UTC
I remember [back in my day] when background guides were one page, single spaced for all three topics for a committee. And they often reused them from year to year.

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Re: Just Because Nat'ls Does It emosnail August 17 2007, 02:39:58 UTC
indeed. I think two pages per topic is about optimum.

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Re: Just Because Nat'ls Does It thepeoplesmp August 16 2007, 23:16:10 UTC
Oh, and nationals is never a fair comparison for circuit conferences. Most delegations that attend nmun a) do it for a class (and thus not only have academic incentive but a professor to consult) and b) attend only one conference a year. Circuit conferences are usually one of three to six that a team will attend a year, with substantially less (proportional) funding and without professors and TAs reading their position papers and talking points.

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Re: Just Because Nat'ls Does It emosnail August 16 2007, 23:18:55 UTC
I really really thing Amwest should just try to be a good conference in their own right instead of being obsessed with being a "practice nationals" type thing. They're a big conference in Fall, whereas most big conferences are in late winter or spring, they could own the West Coast Fall... but instead they're too busy trying to hump the leg of nationals to come up with a clear vision for their own success.

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Re: Just Because Nat'ls Does It thepeoplesmp August 16 2007, 23:59:04 UTC
While I've never been to AmWest (or any paxmun conference -- yet) I definitely think any conference that isn't a mega-conference (1500+) is under immense pressure to live up to the standards set by those conferences; they often lose sight of their own vision in hopes of living up to the big leagues.

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